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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-08-20, Page 7"Tile good heart do" a'litt:Ie mare." "Well well see but you are so h r� • ' -Chinese Proverb. r yourshoes," , a d be oes, mother didn't seem to be ,;-„ '-as glad as I was. What 1f t Co.ul.dn',t Meir? lint then we are getting away 'from', •This, Person '"I"'•mightsonietjc•►, be the chjcicens...I-t'is. a good thing et tee, •It,iti'ight'beet ' a lad eros don't 'wear shoes like i . thjng.thor Y s ke the horses do or the room or that gentleman just corn--' a pair of shoes.would need t • o lag eing in the door.. Anyone mghtsome. ••thage everyfew days, because their rib 'hale feetwand the keenest' eats might some day become. .lull ,In. fact. so "delicate' is the snake upof' the ear and so nu nerons its diseases that the as • you see we `ouldr.'t tell you about the chickens because."the 'cae did'inch tinny things all at once,: and it tegk. a wonder is there is not more deafness. long time to -'tell.. the stou It is, one p£ t7te lean I ;we,'ve;found:the kittens and t t y cotnrrian•ail tens. they: are. mentis Which •comes in'the act ef, Eying k and humanrty ;finds, it must ecce t-. t. - hetlaer it -di ld like it or not " . p • la each generation as people grow older more. - . become• halt or•:laine or' blind as the yea -Tr go-by until everyone has Some thing with which to 'contend . in tithe The,• very strongest and best human beings become• embarrassed- with a wea'kn'ess of some • kind finless, • like "the • one'. hoes shay," all its ,parts manlpulate wonderfully for it's full span of years and then'•give out,' all at once, resulting in' a complete col-; lapse. Isn't it a geed -thing we are not vis abled at the same 'time,' and not all oppressed with the same • disability. The young'and' the strong in. their tem- :por'ary power are here also to,•help'the weak. and through it we .all stumble along ' learning thin:life lesson. If- „.. -ave help each other it makes it all so J much • easier. ' Iii ••I were deaf and should: entera. roomful of people and shouldsee no one there among the many; faces Who . • would care'to make the little 'special y•shrugs of in- need• Td use somebody: ow wilee it'll ret toff i� m d;,. I Y l ty to observe, Y wonder what makes It'"" 1 rust t I � he-w•as all ,stowed 'away :In ..a daft deet where. they will -grow wast -and be lust line 'in a place' where Mamma `Lady ;�jlly can see them . when they • want to, and wind you theyT vere_so teu•te that even Daddy liked to•look at them once in• a while. I didn't tell • you there's a reason for putting them .into. a .closet .that is dark. • P11 tell you about•that another day. ' Of course you know 'even though Yves. haven't'.heard a thing about the chicks' for sq tong •Mb.,mina 'Lady and Billy never _once forgot ,to, feed them x.tid, water them s$, now• it was astonishing to see how big' and fine they •had grown •They were , beautiful .with white, white' feather's Which :rade them warm anet twice a., big as they were before.. a , sure if you had seen, tfiern you wouldn't believe theY were .the same chicks. Bnt..:;they-were, the---very- same 'and if youlooked:close'r you could sure • enough tell' that one- of, them was Squatty •for she, was •getting fatter all the 'time and was ' always looking: ''Par "somethi'nk 'more.. to` eat Bridget was there too. You' would What New York Is Wearing - BY ANNEBELLI WORTHINGTON Illustrated. Dressmaking' Lesson Fur - With 'Every Pattern e*• « ,; : know her because tier' neck A plaided novelty . li effort to bother• with .mei, I w'o'uld•_ er.' _„ jf kavas• -and brQw.nn the _. f^ .: - ktT St� ••that"for me man still �io'n:g'• and tHi:n' and s.1te--w t if fttl 1 aces a front b tame as al modish Th serest would be m'i`ssed and I•wouhi yi• coking" cross. and scold' r uses plaiit�r 11 feel,' watch arid catch ori as best as. I ` e s slenderising ' too ' serve ehicl•:ens act ike•ahat..:Lily,the b d' c'sitd._to a�rhateue-r_was.. _goinby onto -beautiful one exta3 ly w si rot cross. r --q�he ge-aloirg.et•Slloul-d someone. Lel; � �' as c>uld be':besides -o nen. in jelloty •of-eharitt„ •ani tittoned vestee row' buttons. the way. the Shape at the eft 0,1 Sunday Scho;Di Lesson August 23.- Lesson VIII -A Gospel For ,All 'Men—Acts 11:; 5-18. Gol- den Text—There is. no difference between the Jew, and the Greek: for the .same ford over all is rich unto • ,.all that call. unto him.—. Romans 10: 12. • ., ANAIYS'IS I. A'GENTILE'S PRAYER Ap,ISWERED, Acta 10: 1-8. ',, • II. A J-EW'S OUTI,OOK:;ROADENED, Acta 10; 9-23a. �1 A. GENTILE, PENTECOST;' cts 10: g34-48: • . • Go4PEL .FOR :ALL' MEN AC s • ai c the amazement of 'his six' :compani.. the Spins came upon all present, v. One part ' of baptisrn had'ahead been given. Who, then, could hold the other? These uncircumcis Gentile, were then baptized, and th received into the church by an apost ,Although it was considered to be "special case," it marked the beg• nfgig of a new chapter in the histo of the ;church. ' IV. THE GOSPEL' you ALL *EN, Ac 11:1-18 Peter's action p-recipi•tated .a. co • • • o.ns, �. Phone Messages y, wit dBe Recorded us le. New Device Enables' Business is - Executive .rto Have Fut! ry Resume of . ,Phone Transaction • • A device for recording. telephone • n- eenversatioas, local, long distance, - and ,transoceanic, h 'been :perfect-•; he..: ed in Germany. H. H. 'Kohlh:aas, the ' me ,International' Telephone and Tele- graphic. Company's- manager of pub. • iications .announces: it ti The New• Yorlc 'Times, quotes =him, . as follows:., rr i-"We beli'ev0 there, is' a large•,field • fr't; 'this -sort of • device; • "Suppose ; a. reprerentative 'of" • a •• large banking house #las 'Tao : ,»i'aike '• i ,,;.eine rapid °negotiations :on ' an ianr: flotsam matter vi thl a ',bar •ih; 'lel us .say, Buenos Aires ' 'rThe- deal- is completed after a long ' and detailed conversation. lie, then. has to, ex-• •' lain it to''his associates.•; Instead-' of resorting to hasty and: perhaps, illegible, notes,.' he.• turns on. trio Ter corder and the entire',conversa:ion is repeated;.:or, 'perhaps, a stenograph• • er makes a• transcript of it for fur- ther study. • "It"'should', constitute almost the- equivalent of a signed ageeinent, and : it 'is my personal opinion That sato a record would be unimpeaachable. evidence. in court if there should be ' any call for it. Of' course, the, q • new • device will -it., • Various t h ous .u.her applications." • Th.e device. occupies a 'space about' equal. to that of . a. radio-rebeiver.. if • -b'a'sed uele'l r,ho telegrephone, ented ..-over .. thirty. -'years'' ago n ldemar Poulsen, a Danish engi ser.' '•It can record, a conversation of fifteen minutes., The Times goes ..._. n to, say: • " "Its operation 'is , based upon • the priueipie, that a 'steel ' wire can 'be Ede .to -retain degrees of magnetism" Greve rsy rn Jerusalem. -Gentile "Per sons" were. to be welcomed into t; church, of course, but they must co in through the door of circumeisio and live as Jews So said the circum cision• party. Yet, here was' Peter, a apostle, actually; eating with the •u clean pagans=,admin'stering•the rites of the church to them! They did nb understand yet that., a ,follower df Jesius cannot be a respecter ; pf per sons,- that. eee'legias.tical• narro°wne"ss• Lave Co pace o► `. INTRODUCTIoisT•;'.r_.'For "a tithe :‘.the the Caeial snobbery 1 av l , •:Church',:Izad. tar.deal'o hr sttan Programs. niy with. 'Samara 4'.' --•-:- 7 --et •,- itans,•l r eel' te$' " ., • the-exeeptioiial- pee tiop f theeEthn • The B'e§t • opian. eunuch. It now .tpok the great If' we were .for a single day 'to seek stride which carried it over into: the to find good p i in the acts of thee _ purely-Gentile=world: - o triftil e ' ';' Jerusalem •Council. of A.D. 48 did tli aro-fit-id us` -%1 es and. failings fn the shadow church frankly. e f Y' and fully«•recognise the ;equality of. Oentiles, but the bap_ tism of Cornelius 'and .its ratification by the church• was the first step ; to- ward a.r world brotherhood. • •It was air li °~weakness- o nothingness. ur charity, to em.. phasize their beet,' to recognize it, to, ,I)R al to it, to °all it "forth and to de- velop it, life would. seem very differ - a great achievement for Jewish Chris- .eat indeed to ourselves and to them. trans' towelcome.Gentiles The gospel Word is fdr th A smile, a of sympathy, a,tou.'ch Of human kindness, "a: hand clasp 'of fellowship, an unexpected bit .of ten - e •.whole world. . I. A GEN'TILE'S PRAYER' ANSWERED, Acts 10: 1-8.. • derness, courtesy or consideration will After -the persecution th • accomplish wonderer It I Je'.Mte > church in t is syndicating Jerusalem enjoyed. 'peace. r It: was a. sunlight and that is what trap fo m period of'. quiet and steady -growth. 1,,,„, is, It has' a,.cheering, transform The scattering. abroad" of'the' believes: tag powe•r.'.that•no •amount of • criticism ers resulted_in the. growth, in various or reproof could accomplish in change centres, of, the new faith. The"' need ing others. The beat war to take -the eaf- uperi-n•tenlenpe•wasapparent. . t .sting from -one's o �s the time when. Peter', was on' ene of Own sorrow is other; ve these tours, ' there was stationed,, in getting. it in; mini's. tering. toni ;another; . Caesarea a Ilonian . military officer lightening the burden of some one else named Cornelius..Dissatisfied' with'makes out- ownrest more .lightly' on the .pagan. relit o s' he bad been at Our •shoulders tracted to':theg uworshipo purer of the' =- -_ Jews. He acknowledged Jehovah as _the true Odd, ,and was „evidely4 .know,ia • (v. 22) for fits honorable'character. Most Persons who -have failed kn w d 4 • An . UpLook• . '• an philanthro ,.. _St•. w that the �,.hav ipy r1I he was ,the • . e.. failed. Th:erefore:•our •v seeking `soul, feeling •after God, if 'condemnation of their failure does haply he might' find,, Kira," He had help .,them to future ,victory'nearly as: th o i e cuts •.in. 'deep V gathered around• him a grout of si i- much as does..bie • r - to an ..:_- . downivarcl i- to , 1a 1 seeting-.-solYls� • t �iJaelie& that Ueamin ?io n skrrt r' iiad P1ii .lip;`. ey are, going to hay b irarr .� obabl ". e s g' �tt,..the hips alicl is,.'de.p ��ry the `trine settle�itin_ Cees= what they -need„ i---' uch' '•victory. 'Ili . cidedly "length -giving.' n'tluenc,ed them? In a dream he snot, fresh reminder t s amazingly simple l who told !him thltt his g Pe essness of their to make 1 drying. ,throughoutlts •.length„ + The-':•-••-••-'- elegraphone was invented ' before '• e modern three-e'ensent yaccum- be, and it is • >t�derstood be -- _ only knew the 'subject .• tinder, discus:, her. . F ani .quite suite 'Billy will ' . he,' slob I would have _to either • make a • able 'to take her to the shbw. :guess at what was being'• said and risk ' But we haven't said anything about S 1 • givin a•fonliSh-a-nsvtze Jimmie, Chick- -L gasserthat•-•i-b 76 N 31 g i beta a it:was • , me a. question: so. easy to answer" if I pretty.;;, So of .course everybody liked • • through the ps� of the latter that her i ecoid n e�aic"� . g� ads.. per-fected ." .. • Dr`. Curt Stil.le of Berl 1 - "The fluctuating. currentse in • the leplione circuit ere. amplified' In he devise aimed passed thr�ougn 'the„ And ,' saw an angel ' of the seeming h'o' I by it '„•. God ers and charity. h.a risen before base, but an assurialiePy,;tllat•othe:rs see s a sacrifice to be remembered, ..ops where'. they -see none A certain.te e. o. ' 78 in had_,in-sizes=._-e0be1'i }t he }7�d man-wtio has elr'rs6 ga., j4r4. brought P - Cornelius cause " '.dies come . first, An wa inch foreign to• the quc+stion discussed, dor S :. y y es b , I would need to ke•ep silent and a'pa i+that s what Jntiinfe thought for !Cc d ust. Size• 1G requires 3 . 0,, 42"and'•44 'Pear. stupid. ' , _-� j But • if when I came; 1 should ' see • 'among the'many familiar faces, oils to ! li -wh-dfi I ee ld go knowing she wonld•f help me by a sniffle ora nod or a Word f e� y s 35-ineh ,with'. 1/ :yard , 35 -inch contrasting. 1 Sotne dela '. f Sb manyy in the attractive meterialS can the hunger of�a-1 tarinet s kitchen, be-aiseci-icorthisriodZi; only rests I troubled,' occasioned whose Saul was with the parsic.ul GI- n.ierla '�f tit.t i:Changed .+i,. course a.dream 'which wearer. he has'grown to'be.a- young rooster he began. to think hh'.m.ust take 'care r his smaller lad, Sisters' sand another tiring .lie' Was always ready• to fight or them if ' he thought 'anything to fuller k 1 in h f 1 they •ever, thought they could work by thts simp:lei recipe.. He never talk mucli„-�,about . thiiiiill.ures; . he . talks enth:usiasticalitr, tvitij a. -sen .'enee' that fairly.'radiates. from him, alma what he .knows they:. are going to ,ac complish:; "i`, really believe I can 'do it, after all," is'the hopeful spirit in (which men leave his side; ,and then they go' and do it, just because he be- lieved they would: Looking :up is ,al- ways Netter than looking Iowa, both for, ourselves' and._for others. The Only Way —'.... nowt ge. g ' ?s• , e low -men to do "better than ' co wi s till s' flu t in _ va .the sol the min I ttir the reco hint it A. JEW'S OTITTLOOIC - Acts +' 3a of explanation, • which can so easily and unobtrusivelji be given for. deaf people are very:quick to catch, on, just the fact of. being near -her -Would make it possible for me to enjoy all the enter tainment arid' take p'art i d ings. Lcould laugh and talks free for' 1 knovtr my l~riend'. would, give the: ke, to what_was being .said wh necessary. ' I ' It just. another little way of "d ing as 'you would be done by'' The are times when every one of us• ea give this little. • assistance ' whic means so Tittle an, our part but is,. . aeceptable • to the sensitive hard hearing' person; -. • 'TWinght•'Hour Story Chick; and. Other. Little Friends • Don't' you wonder how the chicks' are getting along?. , Wali can tell you they are not little ,chick any more after all this time. Thre oe" four weeks makes 'a big' different etas going to hurt them. Squatty and Bridget and Lily liked to know- a +e. would take care of them too just as Billy used to •.think. :it . pretty mice,' specialry when e. was very small, to now he could ' run' and: t b {k ge ehind, _I Cotten meshes, eye;et; linen, printed' batiste, 'shantung, 'flat washable .,pastel • crepe . silk,• , gingham , ' and 'nov'lty� piques -.you ll like jnimensely. HOW TO " earl h, history,- "' Y c .itch TY, v. 10. The ,question of the relation Jew and Gentile•'had forced itself limn Peter.' The Jews• were' a "peculiar" people -God's .own. Gentiles were "Common." ,As 'they did not coliform to Jewish food •• regula.- ORDER PATTERNS l tions,, theyiwere "unclean." Therefore all social _int' ' erCouirse wa-s' practira-lly prohi•ibited What was' a Chri '• to do?- -Peter 'should have known the. aicstver, for Jesus gave it to him long' ago'. (Nark 19); 19); •but,he had for- gotten. • He -was slow, to 'gra'sli the implications of the' Jesus Way: ,Jopna, with its shipping, its 'busy Gentile• trad'ers,' would raise the question.. It would- also raise the question, ?lid the ly Dacld •s bif leg if he grew ft igltterted Write -t'o'ur name and address lain p n rte about some.htng. Them he =could peer •ly, ,giving number 'and 'size of .such en out from' hie safe hiding place to see patterns as you want: •stani s ( preferred; Enclose 20c in ••� what i.• was, Macon ,.Lady felt, safe p or coin coin o; re .you know. Daciclj liked her to. feel address your order to Wilson Pattern,; n that. way.: ' • . Service, 73. West•Adelaide St:,,Toronto,<j h' Well that's just -the.,way Jimmy. so 'Chick was..., He loo.k-d, different too•' of besides.being bigger, for •he,.•was'ge.t_: ting' such a' -fine reds comb on the top too when Daddy. wa around and iso y) wand, it earefull' for •each nungber, and' Jof hit head:. a id- a n!ce .fan-like' tiii1 (vas showing, of which he was .very proud. .Some of the longest feathers which were in It 'were starting to c bend :over as though they might I' Did you cver•notice' a rooster's pail? s ; It was !begin'ning to get rather crowd- ed in tl,.ir box as : hot, too, since Cagy had so many feathers, but 'dllamt,pa s' Lady, and.Billy noon fixed that tip) • to growing chicks, They. even grow faster than girls. • and boys and that '1 ,,;pretty fest, isn't it? I guess mother thinks 'you grow • fd'st when Shoes 'and other clothes • get too Rifkin 'so • very quickly. But #' �'s great' fun, isn't it, ,to have' a pair-0,f''iiew shoes'every little while • all shiny and smelling new. ' 1 used' to. just love.to hear mother. say "I guess Marie will n ,ed :a new paid of shoes. • She hat actually'outg^own those black slippers''1 got for her' only a month ago." m Then T'would say, feeling very glad, "Oh' yes mother, they hurt all over, and I would see a .nicq store w,itidowful of pretty. shoes'in my mind and•say, "May I liave the pair ('saw. in the shoe+'store 'wi'th he•silver buckles?" It was wonderful. when she :.a'd, _ • A Highly Sensitive •- Instrument ' '• The, eye, L�xtraordinarily:. serisitit•e though it otherwise. can be, experi-- ' Owes great difficulty.in'diseriminat. ing between white and nearly white • 'subslit'tires.. To t.his,. end, ani instru, nicht has bi'en designed Wherein the eye of the observer has been replaced by. a photrelectric ce!l,"which tnablc s the instrument to measure accurately the extremely• small differences be- tween "white" surfaces. : By this means differences inappreciable to the eye of 'even a trained pkserver can be -detested. •• - • 'Lord's cOmmission • extend. to • these • . Precedents .. • , thoughts wove „th.enieelves into . the We are mirreunded by' instriictors; • fabric' of his. drearn.' Did it mean that, for Christie tl we ere in a great school houSel it isN fell of letters, ' lessons, illustrations and appeals, • .41t, then.,. we be found foola 'after all, how bitter how teri. 1 ils, of an electro --magnet, The steel • re • is , drawn' •across' the ' poles; of e latter. by.; •an'• electric motor: The_. etuations, , corresponding with' the vdlce vi ratibns, thus.•are� recorded the steel in minute and invisible" riations of 'magnetism. ' 'When' the conversation is: ended wire; again is drawn through a , enoi.d,i the magnetism- acting upon latter's' coils 'so as to produce a ute .current in them. This, ',In n is 'amplified, and the result ie- reproductign of _the conversation. • - According to Mr. I ohlhaas,. the " rd , may be -kept `virtually inde- •, ' ely,' but it. is thought that in ' t cases a permanent'• record would he needed. - To permit repeated, of the same. piece of 'wire, the ce. incorporates a 'means• for 'netizing, the wire 'by subject' alternating current, after whi n be :used over again. ' The ent is attachab.ie • to any m d• telephone." • I. 'must' have someone byline. who (.mos sinks his owii,will utterly„ iu. mine; who 1"no'r, believes in me"unflinchingly,, who wills use' cling to me in good hap and ill who 'devi lives•''only-,to shed' light .and 'warmth,: ma over niy 'life and nsn•at die if I.fail. I it to Buy yourself a dog, my lord! -I. ei!-' •it ca 'ilk Ibsen.. • ' ' I strum 'L, 14., ere nion" in the sigh of the' All -Father? . ' . . . 4 •• Untrained loie .can Make disa. s- Wheri the Gentile messengers arrived. no littnian, conditioa sAould .mspire,.t • • a Love - this world we should betaught that. • • utile, must, be our condemnation! BI forest, for. 1iis igithean•ce of, letters; ' . 23b-48. ' • • • iot. the savage in the lonely nr. A GENTILE PENTE( I;ST, , Arts •10: but the man who ha s lad every oppor- e a. taming scholarship, add after :all remains in, igeorance,.righfly deserves the 'concentrated 'bitternees of' human contempt."' BUt beware of setting up precedents' and:inaugurat- judgment; ;:hecause God "will -gad.he,i them ail together one, day; and His great threne ,be the, more terrible for. the prec.etients we our Don't Say, "There verY little Christianity id 'the ivorld"; say, rat', er "There is Very little in me." Ustien 1 S i IT' ''' v.aty 4..1" se, --=-7-7:---- BACTGRIA., bON'T %kw l<fei.k) ir 'Nor • at hand, took. withshire sik brethren. from 'Iopp.a, 11: 12. C.orneliue, ;real- izing' the • iinportaneo .•.of this Visit arranged a gathering- to, ,me.et, . When Peter .arrived the e .‘tt- met him, and fell dOWn 'at his fwt prostrated •himself at his feet.. • This I v. 26. Peter, very ,self-eenseious Christ, and . the equal worth of ail' fle▪ -"l'ai,flon me, didn▪ 't were • as'•good .soll for, good seed. To • , yet." • , . . : any. other sphere,' Yet we 'are proefi . Nvhste•ver,,w6_,do _in. folio for 'others • t,een lovingly, afinlgent to ,her boy eences, barn of . her devoted and unto - i,elfielli lave,' have helpe,d to pave his, way, to ruim ' Love most know, aa . well aa ' feel. If *e really love we ' aliouldf be willing to , steady bow to • i letting it take its. own way harm - ,i fully, •What is. best foe those whoni .• 1 we rove,...rather than what we would . 1 like to do .for 'them. 13 the qaestion" 1 that trained ' 'eve 'asks, as, over . tit )1.P(,/A catch 1 my•self i "And this' I pray," wrote Paul to those whom he loved, "that your -love may I abound Yet more andkinore CON SECOND THOU6iiTi YOU'RE Rkieni17: •